Scotland kicked off their June campaign with a straightforward 48-10 win over Canada at the Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton on Saturday.
Tries from Byron McGuigan, Ruaridh Jackson, George Turner (3), Magnus Bradbury and Lewis Carmichael saw Gregor Townsend’s outfit prevail.
In reply the Canadians could only muster a penalty try as their woes continue. They will now hope to bounce back against Russia next weekend.
Scotland led 15-3 at the break but in truth their cushion should have been greater following a dominant opening 40 minutes with ball in hand.
They went ahead after four minutes when Sam Hidalgo-Clyne kicked three points from in front to bring some reward for the early dominance.
That lead became eight points five minutes later when, following a Canadian being caught in their own in-goal, Scotland set a scrum and went wide to McGuigan who finished on the left thanks to a long pass from James Lang. Hidalgo-Clyne was wide with his conversion in the wind.
Canada did manage to get on the board on 14 minutes as Shane O’Leary punished David Denton for not rolling away on the floor, 8-3 the score.
But Scotland, with a one man advantage after Noah Barker was yellow carded on 16 minutes for an off-the-ball tackle on rival prop Allan Dell, almost responded shortly after as fly-half Jackson reached out for the whitewash. He was however denied due to losing his grip on the ball.
Scotland and Jackson would not be denied six minutes from the break though as a line-out drive led to Jackson having a run in for the try.
The second period began in ideal style for the Scots too as hooker Turner was given an easy ride to the whitewash at the back of a driving maul.
But 22-3 soon became 22-10 as on 47 minutes Canada were awarded a penalty try after Jackson slapped down a pass. He also went to the bin.
That numerical disadvantage did not stop Scotland though as Bradbury was next to go over, making it a 29-10 cushion from five metres out before Turner grabbed his second try of the game as he went over once again at the tail of a dominant driving maul. That made it 34-10.
Turner and Scotland sensed blood at the set-piece and it was no surprise to see the keen hooker complete his hat-trick eight minutes from time.
Scotland would still add one further try before the end, with excellent replacement Carmichael racing through a gap for his team’s seventh score.
The scorers:
For Canada:
Try: Penalty try
Pen: O’Leary
Yellow Card: Barker
For Scotland:
Tries: McGuigan, Jackson, Turner 3, Bradbury, Carmichael
Cons: Hidalgo-Clyne 2, Kinghorn 3
Pen: Hidalgo-Clyne
Yellow Card: Jackson
Canada: 15 Pat Parfrey, 14 Jeff Hassler, 13 Ben LeSage, 12 Nick Blevins, 11 DTH van der Merwe (c), 10 Shane O’Leary, 9 Phil Mack (cc), 8 Luke Campbell, 7 Matt Heaton, 6 Lucas Rumball, 5 Evan Olmstead, 4 Paul Ciulini, 3 Jake Ilnicki, 2 Ray Barkwill, 1 Noah Barker
Replacements: 16 Eric Howard, 17 Djustice Sears-Duru, 18 Cole Keith, 19 Conor Keys, 20 Dustin Dobravsky, 21 Andrew Ferguson, 22 Cole Davis, 23 Theo Sauder
Scotland: 15 Blair Kinghorn, 14 Lee Jones, 13 Chris Harris, 12 James Lang, 11 Byron McGuigan, 10 Ruaridh Jackson, 9 Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, 8 David Denton, 7 Jamie Ritchie, 6 Magnus Bradbury, 5 Grant Gilchrist (c), 4 Ben Toolis, 3 Simon Berghan, 2 Fraser Brown, 1 Allan Dell
Replacements: 16 George Turner, 17 Jamie Bhatti, 18 Murray McCallum, 19 Lewis Carmichael, 20 Luke Hamilton, 21 Ali Price, 22 Adam Hastings, 23 Mark Bennett
Referee: Shuhei Kubo (Japan)
Assistant referees: George Clancy (Ireland), Derek Summers (USA)
TMO: Graham Hughes (England)
Although Nicolas Sanchez opened the scoring for the Pumas, the Six Nations outfit dominated the rest of the half and touched down twice through James Davies and George North to open up a 17-3 advantage.
In a breathless encounter, the visitors produced some scintillating rugby to go 24-3 in front through Mike Brown, Elliot Daly and Owen Farrell converted tries, while their full-back added a further three points from the tee.
They have now won their last two matches – against the All Blacks and Ireland (one and two in the world) – at the Queensland venue.
After Beauden Barrett’s sole first-half score, Codie Taylor, Ben Smith, Rieko Ioane (2), Damian McKenzie, Ngani Laumape and Ardie Savea got themselves on the scoresheet as the French scored just the one try through Remy Grosso.
Tries from Amanaki Mafi, Kenki Fukuoka, Loamno Lemeki and Kotaro Matsushima proved too much for Italy, who scored through Tizano Pasquali and Braam Steyn.
Hallam Amos, Tomos Williams and Ryan Elias crossed for the Welsh, with the latter’s 75th minute crossing proving the match-winning score.
Tries from Chris Ashton (3), Victor Vito (2), Finn Russell, Semi Radrada, Sitaleki Timani and Greig Laidlaw entertained the local support.
France put Wales under serious pressure at the breakdown throughout the game and will be kicking themselves that they did not make their dominance count. Their cause was not helped with fly-half Francois Trinh-Duc missing an easy penalty which would have given the hosts the lead going in to the final ten minutes.
Joe Schmidt’s men were excellent throughout but the first half set up the victory with Garry Ringrose, CJ Stander and Jacob Stockdale all crossing the whitewash.
It was a great advert for Six Nations rugby, as both sides maintained a high standard of play throughout, with the final result impossible to predict until the very end.
Although they were comfortable winners in the end, Wales were frustrated for large periods as Italy delivered a competitive performance and the home side only secured their try-scoring bonus point in the 67th minute.
In a thrilling first half, Greig Laidlaw opened the game’s account by kicking a penalty but two Jacob Stockdale tries gave the Emerald Isle an 11-point buffer at the interval.
Eddie Jones required tries but all he got was three-pointers in the first half as the teams traded three penalties apiece. Maxime Machenaud kicked all of Les Bleus’ points while Owen Farrell and Elliot Daly shared out the Red Rose’s before the interval.
It brings to an end an eight-game losing streak for Scotland against England and represents Scotland's greatest triumph of the modern era.
The hosts completely dominated the match, enjoying 69 percent possession and 75 percent territory with Wales having to make 175 tackles.
Les Bleus squandered several chances in the first half. However, after going into the break with a narrow 11-7 advantage, they wore Italy down and eventually put some daylight between themselves and the Azzurri in the second half.
The first half was a wonderfully free-flowing encounter with the sides scoring two tries apiece. Teddy Thomas touched down twice for the French – his second taking them 17-7 clear – but Sean Maitland and Huw Jones crossed the whitewash for the hosts to leave it finely poised.
In a tough and uncompromising encounter, characterised by several brutal collisions, England outscored their hosts two tries to none with Jonny May crossing for a brace in the first half.
Joe Schmidt's men were ruthless in the first half and went into the break leading 28-0. Despite a few defensive errors in the second, they ultimately proved too good for Conor O'Shea's side.
In a fast-paced and entertaining game, both sides gave the ball plenty of air but in the end England proved too strong and outscored their hosts seven tries to two with Anthony Watson and Sam Simmonds scoring a brace each.